Chapter 21 #2

Alban’s expression did not change.

“I said yes,” he replied coolly, “when she was nobody. Some stupid girl your cousin got hard over. Not when she turned out to be the fucking girl of the Benetti sotto capo.” He shook his head once, finally sounding annoyed. “Boston is a bloodbath because of you.”

I forced my face blank.

Inside, everything went very still.

Besnik looked toward me again, dismissive and assessing all at once. “No, no,” he said, almost to himself. “It’s not her. She’s Adam’s girl. She’s nothing.”

“Adam?” I said before I could stop myself. “I’m not dating Adam.” Not anymore. And at that moment, with blood in my mouth and armed men around me, I was almost certain I would let Pietro make him disappear. Weak bastard.

Alban frowned.

Besnik narrowed his eyes. “You’re not?”

I looked at him and felt something in me harden.

“No,” I said clearly. “I’m not Adam’s anything.”

He stared.

Alban’s gaze sharpened on me. “You’re Pietro Benetti’s girl, aren’t you?”

Just a girl. Just someone’s. Just a belonging in the eyes of men who only seemed to understand women as possessions passed between stronger hands. The old version of me would have flinched at that, maybe even accepted the shape of it because it was easier than insisting on something more.

The irony arrived the way the best arguments always did—not as a revelation but as a recognition.

I had written three chapters about exactly this.

About the way power made instruments of the people closest to it, reduced them to extensions of someone else's name, to quantities with no individual value.

I found it in dowry records and succession disputes and the careful erasure of women from the forces that shaped their entire lives.

I had called it the most durable form of control ever invented.

I had not expected to sit inside it.

And I had not expected it to make me this angry.

I sat up straighter on the battered sofa, blood still sharp in my mouth, the fear still very real under my skin, and said with as much dignity as I could gather in a warehouse full of armed men, “I’m not nothing. I’m Emily Hart.”

The room held still around my words. Then Alban’s face changed, and what came over it was the kind of fear that made men crueler, not softer.

“You are Benetti’s girl,” he spat, shaking his head as if the fact itself insulted him.

“Shit. We cannot let her go now. We do and we’re dead.

” He turned on Besnik with such naked fury that spit flew from his mouth.

“You will pay for this. I’ll tell Valon you’re dead for this.

You hear me? Their business is one thing, but their women?

” His gaze snapped back to me, and the expression in it made my stomach drop.

Besnik’s expression hardened for the first time. “We have to kill her.”

“I said yes to your cousin’s bruised pride, not this.” Alban jabbed a finger toward me. “If she dies now, you die one way or another, because Valon will kill us both.”

“Then pray he gets to you before Benetti does.”

The warehouse door exploded inward before the last word had faded from the air.

The sound tore through the room like judgement, every head turning toward it at once, mine included.

For one fractured second, I could not make sense of what I was seeing.

Pietro came through first, not limping, not measured, not remotely the man who smiled at me across breakfast or touched me like I was something breakable, but something colder and far more terrifying, stripped down to pure instinct and function.

Alessandro was right behind him, dark and composed and carrying that same terrible stillness I first felt standing in his doorway in Chicago, and Olivero flanked them with a raised gun , his usual irreverence burned clean out of him.

There was no negotiation. No shouted warning. No demand for surrender.

Pietro moved first, and the entire room seemed to lose whatever illusion of control it had possessed.

His eyes landed on the blood at my mouth and whatever was left of restraint vanished from his face.

“You touched her.”

The cane in his hand stopped being what it had pretended to be and became what it always was: a weapon, an extension of him, something made for damage.

He drove it into the throat of the nearest man with such speed that the body was still folding when he turned and struck another across the wrist hard enough to send the gun skidding over the concrete.

Someone fired. Alessandro answered once, cleanly, economically, and a man dropped before my mind had even caught up enough to fear the shot.

Another lunged at Pietro with a knife and Pietro met him with ruthless efficiency so absolute it bordered on inhuman; he moved aside, caught the man’s arm, and in the same movement drew the blade concealed in the cane and buried it deep under his ribs.

The sound that came out of the man was wet and terrible, but Pietro did not even look at his face as he pulled the weapon free and let him fall.

That was the moment everything became real to me.

Not intellectually. Not in the abstract way it had been real when he told me the truth or when I watched Alessandro and Lily and learned what kind of family this was.

It became real in my body, in the cold wave that swept under my skin, the way my lungs forgot how to work, and the violent understanding that this was not some dark romance I had dressed in beautiful language to make it easier to accept.

This was Pietro Benetti as he had been raised to be, precise and merciless and lethal, and the thing that shook me most was not that I feared him. I didn’t, not truly.

It was that even as I watched him move through blood and violence, some part of me was already trying to make room for it. I understood it. Shockingly, horribly, I understood it, and I knew in that same moment that I could accept it.

By the time the last man hit the floor, the room had gone still except for the ringing in my ears and the harsh sound of a person choking somewhere to my left.

Pietro turned then, and he had to walk over one of the bodies to reach me, blood on his hand, streaked dark across the front of his shirt, his face still wearing the last traces of whatever he became when called to it.

Then his eyes found me, and everything in him changed.

Not enough to erase what I had just seen.

But enough that I watched the killer in him recede behind something rawer and more frantic, something that almost looked like fear.

He crossed the last few steps quickly and dropped in front of me, one hand going to my cheek while the other checked me with fast movements that should have felt clinical and instead felt shaky.

“Emily.” My name sounded shattered in his mouth. “Sweetheart.”

I tried to speak and couldn’t. I had things to say, but I was staring at the blood on his hand where it touched me so carefully, at the shirt stained with the proof of what he had just done, at the impossible fact that none of it made me want to pull away.

“Pietro…I’m okay,” I whispered. Neither of us believed it.

His hand went into his coat pocket then, and when it came back out, my seashell bracelet lay in his palm.

For one second, I didn’t understand what I was looking at.

He had carried it with him the whole time.

Through the panic, through the search, through the drive here, through the bodies now cooling on the warehouse floor, he had kept hold of the one small, stupid, fragile thing no one else would have known mattered.

He slipped it back around my wrist with blood still drying on his knuckles.

“You left this,” he said quietly.

And that was what broke something open in me.

Not the dead men. Not the blood. Not even the sight of him walking toward me through carnage like it belonged to him.

The fact that in the middle of becoming everything he warned me he was, he still remained exactly the man who knew what mattered to me most.

My breath hitched. His hand moved to the back of my neck, steadying, grounding, and when he said, “I’ve got you, sweetheart,” I believed him in a new and far more dangerous way than ever before, because now I understood what those words meant when they came from a man like him.

And as he gathered me into his arms with blood on his shirt and death still warm in the room around us, I knew with a strange clarity that nothing between us would ever be simple after this.

Only truer.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.